"MY BLUE HEAVEN: GENE AUSTIN"

by Archie P. McDonald

Gainesville,
in Cooke County, gained a native son named Eugene Lucas on June 24,1900. Lucas
became one of the nation's most popular entertainers during the 1930s, but by
then he used his stepfather's name-Austin.

Gene Austin led a life of
glamour for seventy-two years. At the age of fifteen he joined the Army and took
part in General J.J. Pershing's futile pursuit of Francisco "Pancho" Villa in
Mexico and in the successful defense of democracy in Europe during WWI.

Austin
trained for a time to become a dentist, switched to the law, but when his rich
tenor voice made possible a career in entertainment, he devoted a great deal of
the remainder of his life to that endeavor.

Austin helped popularize the
"crooner" style of singing also used in the early careers of Bing Crosby, Frank
Sinatra, and Dean Martin. His RCA Victor releases eventually sold eighty-six million
records, including twelve million prints of his most successful recording, "My
Blue Heaven." Other best sellers by Austin included "When My Sugar Walks Down
The Street," "My Melancholy Baby," "Girl Of My Dreams," and "Ramona."

Though
he never learned to read music, Austin helped write such famous melodies as "When
My Sugar Walks Down The Street" and "How Come You Do Me Like You Do (Do Do)?"
He appeared in three musical movies early in the 1930s and often performed on
radio variety shows.

Austin traveled the circuit as a nightclub entertainer
in the 1940s, and eventually settled in Las Vegas, Nevada. He attempted to win
the governor's race of that state in 1962 but lost to Grant Sayer, the incumbent.
Austin died in Palm Springs, California, on January 24, 1972.

Like others
with backgrounds in the eastern Texas region, Austin earned fame and some fortune
a long way from his roots. But "When the whippoorwills call and evening is nigh,"
they always remember the blue heavens of home.